The Plato Library
What is a library, if not a gathering place for the soul? In The Plato Library, the dialogues of Plato are read in full, inviting the listener to sit beside Socrates and his companions as they inquire into justice, beauty, love, knowledge, virtue, and the good life. Come, then, and listen. Not as one who already knows, but as one willing to seek.
Phaedrus Part 2
In which Plato’s Phaedrus unfolds a subtle meditation on love, the soul, and the pursuit of higher truths, employing allegory and irony to reveal the complexities beneath rhetoric and passion. Amid lively discourse and mythic imagery, it gestures towards the eternal dance of reason and desire within the human soul, hinting at a vision of the divine and the immortal in the striving of mortal love.
Phaedrus Part 1
In which Socrates and Phaedrus, wandering beside the Ilissus, engage in a delicate discourse on the nature and power of love, distinguishing the lover from the non-lover through speeches that set the stage for deeper reflections on madness, the soul’s immortality, and the pursuit of truth and beauty. Their conversation unfolds into an exploration of rhetoric—the art of persuasion—and the superiority of spoken word over writing, culminating in an exhortation that true eloquence must be rooted in knowledge, character, and the divine inspiration of philosophy.
Symposium Part 3
In which the discourse unfolds through a profound teaching by Diotima, revealing that love is the pursuit of immortality expressed through generation in beauty, leading the soul to ascend from corporeal attraction to the contemplation of absolute and eternal beauty. Thereafter, the revelry continues with the arrival of the spirited Alcibiades, whose fervent and candid address honours Socrates’ singular wisdom and enduring character amidst the convivial company.
Symposium Part 2
In which the nature and power of Love are explored through myth and reason, revealing human origins as once unified beings now divided and yearning to be whole, and Love understood as a profound force binding gods and mortals alike, filled with complexity and pursuit of the eternal good. This discourse unfolds through the speeches of those present, culminating in a dialogue where the wisdom of a venerable woman teacher imparts that Love is neither god nor mortal but a daimon intermediary, a lover of beauty and goodness, whose essence lies in the unending desire for possession of the good...
Symposium Part 1
In which Apollodorus recounts the occasion of a famous banquet at Agathon’s house, where various distinguished guests propose to deliver encomiums in praise of Love, setting the stage for a series of reflections on its nature and virtues. Each participant, from the poet Phaedrus to the physician Eryximachus, begins to expound upon different aspects of this divine force, illustrating its profound influence on human conduct and the cosmos.
Phaedo Part 8
In which Socrates calmly accepts the cup of poison and gently instructs those around him to bear their sorrow with patience, demonstrating his serene composure amidst farewell. As the fatal draught takes its course, his final words and tranquil manner leave an enduring impression of wisdom and righteousness on his devoted companions.
Phaedo Part 7
In which Socrates leads his companions through a vivid and intricate description of the cosmos and the soul’s journey after death, contrasting the corrupt earthly realm with a purer, more splendid existence beyond. As the hour of his own departure draws near, he calmly prepares for the final moments with a serene acceptance, imparting counsel to his friends and bidding them farewell with a gentle-hearted resolve.
Phaedo Part 6
In which Socrates leads his companions through a careful discourse on the absolute forms of beauty, greatness, and life, distinguishing true essences from their particulars and demonstrating how opposites interact and exclude one another. He further contemplates the soul’s nature as immortal and imperishable, urging attentive care for it beyond mortal life, with a view towards its journey and moral condition after death.
Phaedo Part 5
In which Socrates addresses doubts concerning the nature and immortality of the soul, carefully disentangling the arguments that liken it to a mere harmony of bodily elements and demonstrating the inconsistencies therein. He then reflects on his youthful philosophical inquiries into the causes of existence and the limitations of sensory knowledge, advocating instead for a searching contemplation of the soul’s essence through the light of reason.
Phaedo Part 4
In which Socrates gently leads his companions to contemplate the soul’s captivity by bodily desires and the philosopher’s hopeful striving to purify it for a future existence beyond mortal bonds. Yet, as doubts arise through thoughtful objections likening the soul to a fragile harmony or a worn garment, Socrates embraces these challenges with calm resolve, urging reasoned perseverance rather than despair.
Phaedo Part 3
In which Socrates and his companions explore the notion that our souls possessed knowledge before birth, recognising eternal and unchanging essences distinct from the mutable and corporeal body. They reflect upon the soul’s affinity to the divine and its destiny beyond bodily death, considering the purification of the soul through philosophy as a preparation for a life aligned with truth and immortality.
Phaedo Part 2
In which Socrates and his friends deliberate upon the nature of the soul and its liberation from the body, considering how true knowledge and wisdom are attainable only by disentangling the soul from bodily distractions and corruption. They further explore the soul’s immortality and its cyclic journey between life and death, invoking the principle of opposites and the doctrine of recollection to argue for the soul’s continued existence and its prior acquaintance with eternal truths.
Phaedo Part 1
In which Phaedo recounts the solemn yet serene gathering in the prison where Socrates, surrounded by friends, discourses on the nature of death and the philosopher’s pursuit of truth beyond the body. Through their thoughtful dialogue, they explore the soul’s detachment from bodily pleasures and the hope for a blessed existence after death, marking the commencement of a profound philosophical inquiry.
Meno Part 2 of the Dialogs
In which Socrates engages Meno in a dialectic exploration of virtue, questioning whether it is knowledge, can be taught, or is a divine gift, whilst examining the nature of true opinion and the existence of teachers of virtue in their city. They consider the paradox that while good men exist and guide others, there appear to be no clear instructors of virtue, suggesting it may arise from a form of divine instinct rather than human education.
Meno Part 1 of the Dialogs
In which the young Meno and the contemplative Socrates engage in a probing discourse on the nature and unity of virtue, wrestling with definitions and the coherence of its parts, whilst questioning the possibility of genuine knowledge or teaching. Their exchange leads to a demonstration of learning as recollection, where a slave boy, guided solely by inquiry, is drawn towards recognising truths he had not known, thus revealing the perplexing yet enlightening process of philosophical investigation.
Meno On the Ideas of Plato
In which the multifarious and sometimes contradictory expressions of Plato’s doctrine of ideas are surveyed with a tempered eye, revealing them as poetic symbols and philosophical aspirations rather than rigid teachings, intimately intertwined with notions of the soul’s immortality and the pursuit of knowledge. This account also traces the echoes and transformations of these ancient ideas through subsequent philosophical thought, emphasising their enduring spirit that elevates the divine and ideal above the material and mundane.
Meno Introduction
In which Socrates and Meno engage in an earnest discourse upon the nature and teachableness of virtue, exploring definitions and the perplexities of knowledge through dialectic and the wondrous demonstration of latent understanding within a slave. Their inquiry unfolds amidst reflections on right opinion, the immortality of the soul, and the elusive quest for true education, revealing the paradoxical state of human wisdom and instruction in their time.
Euthyphro
In which Socrates encounters Euthyphro at the King Archon’s porch and is drawn into a discourse concerning the nature of piety, prompted by Euthyphro’s peculiar prosecution of his own father for murder. Through careful questioning, Socrates seeks to unravel the essence of holiness, challenging Euthyphro to define what makes an act pious beyond mere examples or divine approval.
Apology of Socrates Part 2
In which Socrates steadfastly defends his lifelong pursuit of virtue and truth, asserting his divine mission to awaken the soul of Athens despite the threat of death, and resolutely refuses to alter his principles for the sake of self-preservation. He contemplates the nature of death with a hopeful dignity, urging his judges to consider that no harm can befall a good man either in life or after, and entrusts his sons’ upbringing to the city’s care.
Apology of Socrates Part 1
In which Socrates, challenged by longstanding rumours and recent accusations alike, offers a candid and unadorned defence, seeking to dispel falsehoods about his character and his reputed wisdom. He recounts his peculiar mission from the Delphic oracle, engaging interlocutors of various sorts to reveal the nature of true wisdom, while addressing charges of corrupting youth and impiety with measured scrutiny and reasoned argument.